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More advisers at national wirehouses are considering leaving their companies, a new surveys shows. And independent broker-dealer LPL Financial LLC and regional brokerage Raymond James top the list of favorite destinations for those potential breakaways.

An independent report released on Thursday by Cogent Research LLC found that 22% of 1700 advisers surveyed across all distribution channels are “open to the idea” of moving to a new firm. That percentage is consistent with previous years, said Meredith Lloyd Rice, senior project director for Cogent. But substantially more advisers at national wirehouses (29%) said they were considering leaving their firms, than did so in last year survey (25%).

“We think the national wirehouse channel is going to contract from about 30% of advisers currently to 26% over the next several years,” said Ms. Rice. “We predict the biggest growth will be in the RIA channel and, to a lesser degree, the independent B-Ds.”

Wirehouse advisers also are far more likely to be looking outside their distribution channels for greener fields than other advisers, the survey found. Of the 380 advisers who said they were likely to move, 73% of them said they intend to stay in the same channel. But only 50% of the wirehouse advisers considering a move said they planned to look for a job with another large Wall Street firm. “There's a lot less in-channel loyalty among the wirehouse advisers,” Ms. Rice said.

The reasons most often cited by wirehouse advisers for wanting to leave were the opportunity to make more money and a desire for greater job satisfaction.

In terms of where advisers would like to land, LPL ranked first among 25 broker-dealers listed as options. Cogent asked advisers to rank on a scale of 0 to 10 the likelihood that they would consider each broker-dealer as a potential destination. “High” consideration included ratings of between 5 and 10. Forty-three percent of the advisers surveyed gave LPL high ratings, while 40% did so for Raymond James.

“A theme we saw in the research was that advisers' considering a move want more independence and they see LPL and Raymond James as offering them more flexibility,” Ms. Rice said. “It suggests [those firms are] on the right track and competitors should take note.”